Jump to Resources

GEOGRAPHY of LATIN AMERICA BUNDLE

Give your students a solid background in the Geography of South America with the Geography of Latin America Bundle.

  • 2 Google Slides lessons with notetaking guides: Central America and the Caribbean and South America
  • 15 Daily Openers with student worksheets
  • Activity Packet (print, digital, editable, and answers)
  • Intro Diagnostic Activity
  • 5 Map Quizzes: The Caribbean, Central America and the Caribbean, South America, all of Latin America
  • Unit Test: regular multiple choice, modified version with fewer choices, answer key and study guide

PLANNING this MINI-UNIT

South America is the second mini-unit or topic taught in the “Geography of Latin America” unit.  This topic covers: Vertical zonation, ranching in South America, major land and water features, the Amazon, Falkland Islands, climate zones, megacities, favelas, the standard of living comparison, Machu Picchu, the Lesser Antilles, the Galapagos, historic events, languages of South America, immigration patterns, and the political crisis in Venezuela.

This mini-unit covers the following thirteen countries:

Relative Location of South America Map
  1. Venezuela
  2. Colombia
  3. Ecuador
  4. Peru
  5. Brazil
  6. Bolivia
  7. Paraguay
  8. Uruguay
  9. Chile
  10. Argentina
  11. Suriname
  12. Guyana
  13. French Guiana

Pacing

Teachers should plan three to five days to teach this unit on a traditional schedule with one-hour class periods. However, for those on a block schedule with 1 1/2 hour classes, teachers should plan for 2-3 days. An effective way to structure this unit includes:

Openers

The “Geography of Latin” unit has 15 openers that review the following topics: Population distribution, per capita income, government, travel advisories, deforestation, physical geography, flags, political stability and more.  CLICK HERE for more information on openers for the “Geography of Latin America” unit.

OPENER TOPICS

Central America and the Caribbean

  1. Suffrage in Latin America
  2. Population Distribution Country Match
  3. Per Capita Income Analysis
  4. Types of Government
  5. Travel Advisory: Nicaragua

Physical Geography

  1. Panama Canal
  2. Lake Nicaragua
  3. Deforestation in the Amazon Rainforest
  4. Hydroelectric Power
  5. Andes Mountains

South America

  1. Population Pyramid: Brazil
  2. Argentina’s Flag
  3. Climograph: Colombia
  4. Uruguay and Paraguay Comparison
  5. Political Stability in Peru

Google Slides

GOOGLE SLIDES:  After the opener, begin the 🔗 Google Slides lesson. Students can take notes on paper using the note-taking guide provided with the Google Slides lesson, or they may take notes digitally with the electronic version (also included with the Google Slides). 

Previous slide
Next slide

TEACHING TIPS

⭐️ TEACHER TIP: I post a PDF version of the Google Slides to Google Classroom so that students can review their notes if they are absent. Click “File, Download, PDF” on the Google Slide to do this.   


⭐️ TEACHER TIP: Some teachers post Google Slides in their Google Classroom and digital note-taking guides for students to complete as homework.


⭐️TEACHER TIP: When pressed for time, I will edit the note-taking guides to include answers for some boxes or delete boxes and slides entirely. Teachers should feel free to modify the lesson to meet their student’s needs and individual learning targets.

Activities

Note-Taking Guides

This Geography of South America Note-Taking Guide should be paired with Google Slides (see above).  Teachers can walk students through these notes or post lecture notes on their chosen platform and have students record the information.  Here is a preview of the print and digital versions of the note-taking guides

Student Worksheets & Activities

There are ten pages of activities to choose from to enhance any of the Geography of Latin America mini-units.

  1. Coloring the political map of Latin America
  2. Latitude and Longitude practice
  3. Physical map of Latin America questions
  4. Labels and coloring of Latin America physical map
  5. Population pyramid analysis 
  6. Urbanization graph comparison and analysis
  7. Ancient empire reading and questions
  8. Travel poster
  9. 5 Themes of Geography: Latin America paragraph
  10. Current even research

UNIT: Introduction Diagnostic Activity

Prior to teaching your geography unit on the United States and Canada, discover what your students already know about the geographic region.

This activity asks students to name countries, place physical features on a map and answer critical thinking questions.

WHAT COMES WITH THE DOWNLOAD:
1. Teacher tips and lesson plans for the activity
2. Student Worksheet
3. Answer Key

UNIT: Map Quizzes

"Latin America Map Quizzes" is a quiz bundle that offers quizzes on each of the regions of Latin America, as well as a cumulative map quiz with all regions combined.

1. THE CARIBBEAN
Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic

2. CENTRAL AMERICA
Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica

3. SOUTH AMERICA
Bolivia, Colombia, Brazil, Suriname, French Guiana, Venezuela, Ecuador, Guyana, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, Peru

Each quiz includes the following:
1. Quiz without countries listed
2. Quiz with countries listed
3. Answer Key
4. Print and Google Form versions

Helpful Videos

Break up direct instruction by showing a video that reviews concepts they just learned.

Key Terms & Vocabulary

COUNTRIES of SOUTH AMERICA

  1. Venezuela
  2. Colombia
  3. Ecuador
  4. Peru
  5. Brazil
  6. Bolivia
  7. Paraguay
  8. Uruguay
  9. Chile
  10. Argentina
  11. Suriname
  12. Guyana
  13. French Guiana 

ANCIENT empires

  1. Inca
  2. Machu Picchu
  3. Indigenous

CLIMATE and the LAND

  1. Vertical Zonation (Tierra Nevada, Tierra Helada, Tierra Fria, tierra Templada, Tierra Caliente)
  2. Llanos
  3. Pampas
  4. Amazon River
  5. Amazon River Basin/Rainforest
  6. Lesser Antilles
  7. Brazilian Highlands
  8. Patagonia
  9. Strait of Magellan
  10. El Nino

OTHER
key terms

  1. Gauchos
  2. Tributaries
  3. Falkland Islands
  4. Favela
  5. The Galapagos
  6. St. Croix
  7. Trinidad and Tobago
  8. Treaty of Tordesillas
  9. General Pinochet
  10. Bolivarian Movement
  11. Catholicism
  12. Rio de Janiero
  13. Carnival
  14. Primate City
Learning Target

LEARNING TARGETS

  1. Students can identify the thirteen countries of South America.
  2. Students can argue what factors distinguish South America as a region.
  3. Students can argue where and why South Americans use vertical zonation to grow crops. 
  4. Students can explain how South America’s land use affects indigenous populations. 
  5. Students can argue about the significance of the Amazon River and the Amazon River Basin. 
  6. Students can trace the history of the Falkland Islands.
  7. Students can analyze the development, significance and effects megacities have on its residents. 
  8. Students can define favelas, explain factors that led to their development, and argue how favelas impact residents. 
  9. Students can argue about how European colonization affected South America’s indigenous population and shaped South America’s language, religion and holidays.
  10. Students can explain the historic migration patterns Suriname and argue how those migration patterns impacted Suriname’s culture. 
  11. Students will be able to describe how Venezuela’s authoritarian government affects Venezuela’s level of economic, political and social stability.
  12. Students can evaluate the countries of South America’s level of economic stability using key economic indicators to justify their response.
  13. Students can identify and locate major land and features in South America.

Take me to the Geography of Latin America products on Teachers Pay Teachers

CHECK out the latest on INSTAGRAM

@teacher_bistro

hey there

Thank you for stopping by Teacher Bistro.  I created this place as a resource for educators who wanted an easy way to find resources.  In my first ten years of teaching, I can’t tell you how many hours I spent gathering lesson plans, video guides, and lectures.  Hopefully, you have added this site to your bookmarks, and this place can make teaching a little bit easier.